Files
android_external_rsync/util.c

1156 lines
24 KiB
C

/* -*- c-file-style: "linux" -*-
*
* Copyright (C) 1996-2000 by Andrew Tridgell
* Copyright (C) Paul Mackerras 1996
* Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by Martin Pool <mbp@samba.org>
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*/
/**
* @file
*
* Utilities used in rsync
**/
#include "rsync.h"
extern int verbose;
extern int dry_run;
extern int module_id;
extern int modify_window;
extern struct exclude_list_struct server_exclude_list;
int sanitize_paths = 0;
/**
* Set a fd into nonblocking mode
**/
void set_nonblocking(int fd)
{
int val;
if ((val = fcntl(fd, F_GETFL, 0)) == -1)
return;
if (!(val & NONBLOCK_FLAG)) {
val |= NONBLOCK_FLAG;
fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, val);
}
}
/**
* Set a fd into blocking mode
**/
void set_blocking(int fd)
{
int val;
if ((val = fcntl(fd, F_GETFL, 0)) == -1)
return;
if (val & NONBLOCK_FLAG) {
val &= ~NONBLOCK_FLAG;
fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, val);
}
}
/**
* Create a file descriptor pair - like pipe() but use socketpair if
* possible (because of blocking issues on pipes).
*
* Always set non-blocking.
*/
int fd_pair(int fd[2])
{
int ret;
#if HAVE_SOCKETPAIR
ret = socketpair(AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0, fd);
#else
ret = pipe(fd);
#endif
if (ret == 0) {
set_nonblocking(fd[0]);
set_nonblocking(fd[1]);
}
return ret;
}
void print_child_argv(char **cmd)
{
rprintf(FINFO, "opening connection using ");
for (; *cmd; cmd++) {
/* Look for characters that ought to be quoted. This
* is not a great quoting algorithm, but it's
* sufficient for a log message. */
if (strspn(*cmd, "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
"ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"
"0123456789"
",.-_=+@/") != strlen(*cmd)) {
rprintf(FINFO, "\"%s\" ", *cmd);
} else {
rprintf(FINFO, "%s ", *cmd);
}
}
rprintf(FINFO, "\n");
}
void out_of_memory(char *str)
{
rprintf(FERROR, "ERROR: out of memory in %s\n", str);
exit_cleanup(RERR_MALLOC);
}
void overflow(char *str)
{
rprintf(FERROR, "ERROR: buffer overflow in %s\n", str);
exit_cleanup(RERR_MALLOC);
}
int set_modtime(char *fname, time_t modtime)
{
if (dry_run)
return 0;
if (verbose > 2) {
rprintf(FINFO, "set modtime of %s to (%ld) %s",
fname, (long)modtime,
asctime(localtime(&modtime)));
}
{
#ifdef HAVE_UTIMBUF
struct utimbuf tbuf;
tbuf.actime = time(NULL);
tbuf.modtime = modtime;
return utime(fname,&tbuf);
#elif defined(HAVE_UTIME)
time_t t[2];
t[0] = time(NULL);
t[1] = modtime;
return utime(fname,t);
#else
struct timeval t[2];
t[0].tv_sec = time(NULL);
t[0].tv_usec = 0;
t[1].tv_sec = modtime;
t[1].tv_usec = 0;
return utimes(fname,t);
#endif
}
}
/**
Create any necessary directories in fname. Unfortunately we don't know
what perms to give the directory when this is called so we need to rely
on the umask
**/
int create_directory_path(char *fname, int base_umask)
{
char *p;
while (*fname == '/')
fname++;
while (strncmp(fname, "./", 2) == 0)
fname += 2;
p = fname;
while ((p = strchr(p,'/')) != NULL) {
*p = 0;
do_mkdir(fname, 0777 & ~base_umask);
*p = '/';
p++;
}
return 0;
}
/**
* Write @p len bytes at @p ptr to descriptor @p desc, retrying if
* interrupted.
*
* @retval len upon success
*
* @retval <0 write's (negative) error code
*
* Derived from GNU C's cccp.c.
*/
static int full_write(int desc, char *ptr, size_t len)
{
int total_written;
total_written = 0;
while (len > 0) {
int written = write(desc, ptr, len);
if (written < 0) {
if (errno == EINTR)
continue;
return written;
}
total_written += written;
ptr += written;
len -= written;
}
return total_written;
}
/**
* Read @p len bytes at @p ptr from descriptor @p desc, retrying if
* interrupted.
*
* @retval >0 the actual number of bytes read
*
* @retval 0 for EOF
*
* @retval <0 for an error.
*
* Derived from GNU C's cccp.c. */
static int safe_read(int desc, char *ptr, size_t len)
{
int n_chars;
if (len == 0)
return len;
do {
n_chars = read(desc, ptr, len);
} while (n_chars < 0 && errno == EINTR);
return n_chars;
}
/** Copy a file.
*
* This is used in conjunction with the --temp-dir option */
int copy_file(char *source, char *dest, mode_t mode)
{
int ifd;
int ofd;
char buf[1024 * 8];
int len; /* Number of bytes read into `buf'. */
ifd = do_open(source, O_RDONLY, 0);
if (ifd == -1) {
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "open %s", full_fname(source));
return -1;
}
if (robust_unlink(dest) && errno != ENOENT) {
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "unlink %s", full_fname(dest));
return -1;
}
ofd = do_open(dest, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC | O_EXCL, mode);
if (ofd == -1) {
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "open %s", full_fname(dest));
close(ifd);
return -1;
}
while ((len = safe_read(ifd, buf, sizeof buf)) > 0) {
if (full_write(ofd, buf, len) < 0) {
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "write %s", full_fname(dest));
close(ifd);
close(ofd);
return -1;
}
}
if (len < 0) {
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "read %s", full_fname(source));
close(ifd);
close(ofd);
return -1;
}
if (close(ifd) < 0) {
rsyserr(FINFO, errno, "close failed on %s",
full_fname(source));
}
if (close(ofd) < 0) {
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "close failed on %s",
full_fname(dest));
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
/* MAX_RENAMES should be 10**MAX_RENAMES_DIGITS */
#define MAX_RENAMES_DIGITS 3
#define MAX_RENAMES 1000
/**
* Robust unlink: some OS'es (HPUX) refuse to unlink busy files, so
* rename to <path>/.rsyncNNN instead.
*
* Note that successive rsync runs will shuffle the filenames around a
* bit as long as the file is still busy; this is because this function
* does not know if the unlink call is due to a new file coming in, or
* --delete trying to remove old .rsyncNNN files, hence it renames it
* each time.
**/
int robust_unlink(char *fname)
{
#ifndef ETXTBSY
return do_unlink(fname);
#else
static int counter = 1;
int rc, pos, start;
char path[MAXPATHLEN];
rc = do_unlink(fname);
if (rc == 0 || errno != ETXTBSY)
return rc;
if ((pos = strlcpy(path, fname, MAXPATHLEN)) >= MAXPATHLEN)
pos = MAXPATHLEN - 1;
while (pos > 0 && path[pos-1] != '/')
pos--;
pos += strlcpy(path+pos, ".rsync", MAXPATHLEN-pos);
if (pos > (MAXPATHLEN-MAX_RENAMES_DIGITS-1)) {
errno = ETXTBSY;
return -1;
}
/* start where the last one left off to reduce chance of clashes */
start = counter;
do {
sprintf(&path[pos], "%03d", counter);
if (++counter >= MAX_RENAMES)
counter = 1;
} while ((rc = access(path, 0)) == 0 && counter != start);
if (verbose > 0) {
rprintf(FINFO,"renaming %s to %s because of text busy\n",
fname, path);
}
/* maybe we should return rename()'s exit status? Nah. */
if (do_rename(fname, path) != 0) {
errno = ETXTBSY;
return -1;
}
return 0;
#endif
}
/* Returns 0 on success, -1 on most errors, and -2 if we got an error
* trying to copy the file across file systems. */
int robust_rename(char *from, char *to, int mode)
{
int tries = 4;
while (tries--) {
if (do_rename(from, to) == 0)
return 0;
switch (errno) {
#ifdef ETXTBSY
case ETXTBSY:
if (robust_unlink(to) != 0)
return -1;
break;
#endif
case EXDEV:
if (copy_file(from, to, mode) != 0)
return -2;
do_unlink(from);
return 0;
default:
return -1;
}
}
return -1;
}
static pid_t all_pids[10];
static int num_pids;
/** Fork and record the pid of the child. **/
pid_t do_fork(void)
{
pid_t newpid = fork();
if (newpid != 0 && newpid != -1) {
all_pids[num_pids++] = newpid;
}
return newpid;
}
/**
* Kill all children.
*
* @todo It would be kind of nice to make sure that they are actually
* all our children before we kill them, because their pids may have
* been recycled by some other process. Perhaps when we wait for a
* child, we should remove it from this array. Alternatively we could
* perhaps use process groups, but I think that would not work on
* ancient Unix versions that don't support them.
**/
void kill_all(int sig)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < num_pids; i++) {
/* Let's just be a little careful where we
* point that gun, hey? See kill(2) for the
* magic caused by negative values. */
pid_t p = all_pids[i];
if (p == getpid())
continue;
if (p <= 0)
continue;
kill(p, sig);
}
}
/** Turn a user name into a uid */
int name_to_uid(char *name, uid_t *uid)
{
struct passwd *pass;
if (!name || !*name)
return 0;
pass = getpwnam(name);
if (pass) {
*uid = pass->pw_uid;
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
/** Turn a group name into a gid */
int name_to_gid(char *name, gid_t *gid)
{
struct group *grp;
if (!name || !*name)
return 0;
grp = getgrnam(name);
if (grp) {
*gid = grp->gr_gid;
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
/** Lock a byte range in a open file */
int lock_range(int fd, int offset, int len)
{
struct flock lock;
lock.l_type = F_WRLCK;
lock.l_whence = SEEK_SET;
lock.l_start = offset;
lock.l_len = len;
lock.l_pid = 0;
return fcntl(fd,F_SETLK,&lock) == 0;
}
static int exclude_server_path(char *arg)
{
char *s;
if (server_exclude_list.head) {
for (s = arg; (s = strchr(s, '/')) != NULL; ) {
*s = '\0';
if (check_exclude(&server_exclude_list, arg, 1) < 0) {
/* We must leave arg truncated! */
return 1;
}
*s++ = '/';
}
}
return 0;
}
static void glob_expand_one(char *s, char ***argv_ptr, int *argc_ptr,
int *maxargs_ptr)
{
char **argv = *argv_ptr;
int argc = *argc_ptr;
int maxargs = *maxargs_ptr;
#if !(defined(HAVE_GLOB) && defined(HAVE_GLOB_H))
if (argc == maxargs) {
maxargs += MAX_ARGS;
if (!(argv = realloc_array(argv, char *, maxargs)))
out_of_memory("glob_expand_one");
*argv_ptr = argv;
*maxargs_ptr = maxargs;
}
if (!*s)
s = ".";
s = argv[argc++] = strdup(s);
exclude_server_path(s);
#else
glob_t globbuf;
int i;
if (maxargs <= argc)
return;
if (!*s)
s = ".";
s = strdup(s);
if (sanitize_paths)
sanitize_path(s, NULL);
memset(&globbuf, 0, sizeof globbuf);
if (!exclude_server_path(s))
glob(s, 0, NULL, &globbuf);
if (MAX((int)globbuf.gl_pathc, 1) > maxargs - argc) {
maxargs += globbuf.gl_pathc + MAX_ARGS;
if (!(argv = realloc_array(argv, char *, maxargs)))
out_of_memory("glob_expand_one");
*argv_ptr = argv;
*maxargs_ptr = maxargs;
}
if (globbuf.gl_pathc == 0)
argv[argc++] = s;
else {
int j = globbuf.gl_pathc;
free(s);
for (i = 0; i < j; i++) {
if (!(argv[argc++] = strdup(globbuf.gl_pathv[i])))
out_of_memory("glob_expand_one");
}
}
globfree(&globbuf);
#endif
*argc_ptr = argc;
}
/* This routine is only used in daemon mode. */
void glob_expand(char *base1, char ***argv_ptr, int *argc_ptr, int *maxargs_ptr)
{
char *s = (*argv_ptr)[*argc_ptr];
char *p, *q;
char *base = base1;
int base_len = strlen(base);
if (!s || !*s)
return;
if (strncmp(s, base, base_len) == 0)
s += base_len;
if (!(s = strdup(s)))
out_of_memory("glob_expand");
if (asprintf(&base," %s/", base1) <= 0)
out_of_memory("glob_expand");
base_len++;
for (q = s; *q; q = p + base_len) {
if ((p = strstr(q, base)) != NULL)
*p = '\0'; /* split it at this point */
glob_expand_one(q, argv_ptr, argc_ptr, maxargs_ptr);
if (!p)
break;
}
free(s);
free(base);
}
/**
* Convert a string to lower case
**/
void strlower(char *s)
{
while (*s) {
if (isupper(*(unsigned char *)s))
*s = tolower(*(unsigned char *)s);
s++;
}
}
/* Join strings p1 & p2 into "dest" with a guaranteed '/' between them. (If
* p1 ends with a '/', no extra '/' is inserted.) Returns the length of both
* strings + 1 (if '/' was inserted), regardless of whether the null-terminated
* string fits into destsize. */
size_t pathjoin(char *dest, size_t destsize, const char *p1, const char *p2)
{
size_t len = strlcpy(dest, p1, destsize);
if (len < destsize - 1) {
if (!len || dest[len-1] != '/')
dest[len++] = '/';
if (len < destsize - 1)
len += strlcpy(dest + len, p2, destsize - len);
else {
dest[len] = '\0';
len += strlen(p2);
}
}
else
len += strlen(p2) + 1; /* Assume we'd insert a '/'. */
return len;
}
/* Join any number of strings together, putting them in "dest". The return
* value is the length of all the strings, regardless of whether the null-
* terminated whole fits in destsize. Your list of string pointers must end
* with a NULL to indicate the end of the list. */
size_t stringjoin(char *dest, size_t destsize, ...)
{
va_list ap;
size_t len, ret = 0;
const char *src;
va_start(ap, destsize);
while (1) {
if (!(src = va_arg(ap, const char *)))
break;
len = strlen(src);
ret += len;
if (destsize > 1) {
if (len >= destsize)
len = destsize - 1;
memcpy(dest, src, len);
destsize -= len;
dest += len;
}
}
*dest = '\0';
va_end(ap);
return ret;
}
void clean_fname(char *name)
{
char *p;
int l;
int modified = 1;
if (!name)
return;
while (modified) {
modified = 0;
if ((p = strstr(name,"/./")) != NULL) {
modified = 1;
while (*p) {
p[0] = p[2];
p++;
}
}
if ((p = strstr(name,"//")) != NULL) {
modified = 1;
while (*p) {
p[0] = p[1];
p++;
}
}
if (strncmp(p = name, "./", 2) == 0) {
modified = 1;
do {
p[0] = p[2];
} while (*p++);
}
l = strlen(p = name);
if (l > 1 && p[l-1] == '/') {
modified = 1;
p[l-1] = 0;
}
}
}
/**
* Make path appear as if a chroot had occurred:
*
* @li 1. remove leading "/" (or replace with "." if at end)
*
* @li 2. remove leading ".." components (except those allowed by @p reldir)
*
* @li 3. delete any other "<dir>/.." (recursively)
*
* Can only shrink paths, so sanitizes in place.
*
* While we're at it, remove double slashes and "." components like
* clean_fname() does, but DON'T remove a trailing slash because that
* is sometimes significant on command line arguments.
*
* If @p reldir is non-null, it is a sanitized directory that the path will be
* relative to, so allow as many ".." at the beginning of the path as
* there are components in reldir. This is used for symbolic link targets.
* If reldir is non-null and the path began with "/", to be completely like
* a chroot we should add in depth levels of ".." at the beginning of the
* path, but that would blow the assumption that the path doesn't grow and
* it is not likely to end up being a valid symlink anyway, so just do
* the normal removal of the leading "/" instead.
*
* Contributed by Dave Dykstra <dwd@bell-labs.com>
*/
void sanitize_path(char *p, char *reldir)
{
char *start, *sanp;
int depth = 0;
int allowdotdot = 0;
if (reldir) {
int new_component = 1;
while (*reldir) {
if (*reldir++ == '/')
new_component = 1;
else if (new_component) {
new_component = 0;
depth++;
}
}
}
start = p;
sanp = p;
while (*p == '/') {
/* remove leading slashes */
p++;
}
while (*p != '\0') {
/* this loop iterates once per filename component in p.
* both p (and sanp if the original had a slash) should
* always be left pointing after a slash
*/
if (*p == '.' && (p[1] == '/' || p[1] == '\0')) {
/* skip "." component */
while (*++p == '/') {
/* skip following slashes */
;
}
continue;
}
allowdotdot = 0;
if (*p == '.' && p[1] == '.' && (p[2] == '/' || p[2] == '\0')) {
/* ".." component followed by slash or end */
if (depth > 0 && sanp == start) {
/* allow depth levels of .. at the beginning */
--depth;
allowdotdot = 1;
} else {
p += 2;
if (*p == '/')
p++;
if (sanp != start) {
/* back up sanp one level */
--sanp; /* now pointing at slash */
while (sanp > start && sanp[-1] != '/') {
/* skip back up to slash */
sanp--;
}
}
continue;
}
}
while (1) {
/* copy one component through next slash */
*sanp++ = *p++;
if (*p == '\0' || p[-1] == '/') {
while (*p == '/') {
/* skip multiple slashes */
p++;
}
break;
}
}
if (allowdotdot) {
/* move the virtual beginning to leave the .. alone */
start = sanp;
}
}
if (sanp == start && !allowdotdot) {
/* ended up with nothing, so put in "." component */
/*
* note that the !allowdotdot doesn't prevent this from
* happening in all allowed ".." situations, but I didn't
* think it was worth putting in an extra variable to ensure
* it since an extra "." won't hurt in those situations.
*/
*sanp++ = '.';
}
*sanp = '\0';
}
/* Works much like sanitize_path(), with these differences: (1) a new buffer
* is allocated for the sanitized path rather than modifying it in-place; (2)
* a leading slash gets transformed into the rootdir value (which can be empty
* or NULL if you just want the slash to get dropped); (3) no "reldir" can be
* specified. */
char *alloc_sanitize_path(const char *path, const char *rootdir)
{
char *buf;
int rlen, plen = strlen(path);
if (*path == '/' && rootdir) {
rlen = strlen(rootdir);
if (rlen == 1)
path++;
} else
rlen = 0;
if (!(buf = new_array(char, rlen + plen + 1)))
out_of_memory("alloc_sanitize_path");
if (rlen)
memcpy(buf, rootdir, rlen);
memcpy(buf + rlen, path, plen + 1);
if (rlen > 1)
rlen++;
sanitize_path(buf + rlen, NULL);
if (rlen && buf[rlen] == '.' && buf[rlen+1] == '\0') {
if (rlen > 1)
rlen--;
buf[rlen] = '\0';
}
return buf;
}
char curr_dir[MAXPATHLEN];
unsigned int curr_dir_len;
/**
* Like chdir(), but it keeps track of the current directory (in the
* global "curr_dir"), and ensures that the path size doesn't overflow.
* Also cleans the path using the clean_fname() function.
**/
int push_dir(char *dir)
{
static int initialised;
unsigned int len;
if (!initialised) {
initialised = 1;
getcwd(curr_dir, sizeof curr_dir - 1);
curr_dir_len = strlen(curr_dir);
}
if (!dir) /* this call was probably just to initialize */
return 0;
len = strlen(dir);
if (len == 1 && *dir == '.')
return 1;
if ((*dir == '/' ? len : curr_dir_len + 1 + len) >= sizeof curr_dir)
return 0;
if (chdir(dir))
return 0;
if (*dir == '/') {
memcpy(curr_dir, dir, len + 1);
curr_dir_len = len;
} else {
curr_dir[curr_dir_len++] = '/';
memcpy(curr_dir + curr_dir_len, dir, len + 1);
curr_dir_len += len;
}
clean_fname(curr_dir);
return 1;
}
/**
* Reverse a push_dir() call. You must pass in an absolute path
* that was copied from a prior value of "curr_dir".
**/
int pop_dir(char *dir)
{
if (chdir(dir))
return 0;
curr_dir_len = strlcpy(curr_dir, dir, sizeof curr_dir);
if (curr_dir_len >= sizeof curr_dir)
curr_dir_len = sizeof curr_dir - 1;
return 1;
}
/**
* Return a quoted string with the full pathname of the indicated filename.
* The string " (in MODNAME)" may also be appended. The returned pointer
* remains valid until the next time full_fname() is called.
**/
char *full_fname(const char *fn)
{
static char *result = NULL;
char *m1, *m2, *m3;
char *p1, *p2;
if (result)
free(result);
if (*fn == '/')
p1 = p2 = "";
else {
p1 = curr_dir;
p2 = "/";
}
if (module_id >= 0) {
m1 = " (in ";
m2 = lp_name(module_id);
m3 = ")";
if (*p1) {
if (!lp_use_chroot(module_id)) {
char *p = lp_path(module_id);
if (*p != '/' || p[1])
p1 += strlen(p);
}
if (!*p1)
p2++;
else
p1++;
}
else
fn++;
} else
m1 = m2 = m3 = "";
asprintf(&result, "\"%s%s%s\"%s%s%s", p1, p2, fn, m1, m2, m3);
return result;
}
/** We need to supply our own strcmp function for file list comparisons
to ensure that signed/unsigned usage is consistent between machines. */
int u_strcmp(const char *cs1, const char *cs2)
{
const uchar *s1 = (const uchar *)cs1;
const uchar *s2 = (const uchar *)cs2;
while (*s1 && *s2 && (*s1 == *s2)) {
s1++; s2++;
}
return (int)*s1 - (int)*s2;
}
/**
* Determine if a symlink points outside the current directory tree.
* This is considered "unsafe" because e.g. when mirroring somebody
* else's machine it might allow them to establish a symlink to
* /etc/passwd, and then read it through a web server.
*
* Null symlinks and absolute symlinks are always unsafe.
*
* Basically here we are concerned with symlinks whose target contains
* "..", because this might cause us to walk back up out of the
* transferred directory. We are not allowed to go back up and
* reenter.
*
* @param dest Target of the symlink in question.
*
* @param src Top source directory currently applicable. Basically this
* is the first parameter to rsync in a simple invocation, but it's
* modified by flist.c in slightly complex ways.
*
* @retval True if unsafe
* @retval False is unsafe
*
* @sa t_unsafe.c
**/
int unsafe_symlink(const char *dest, const char *src)
{
const char *name, *slash;
int depth = 0;
/* all absolute and null symlinks are unsafe */
if (!dest || !*dest || *dest == '/')
return 1;
/* find out what our safety margin is */
for (name = src; (slash = strchr(name, '/')) != 0; name = slash+1) {
if (strncmp(name, "../", 3) == 0) {
depth = 0;
} else if (strncmp(name, "./", 2) == 0) {
/* nothing */
} else {
depth++;
}
}
if (strcmp(name, "..") == 0)
depth = 0;
for (name = dest; (slash = strchr(name, '/')) != 0; name = slash+1) {
if (strncmp(name, "../", 3) == 0) {
/* if at any point we go outside the current directory
then stop - it is unsafe */
if (--depth < 0)
return 1;
} else if (strncmp(name, "./", 2) == 0) {
/* nothing */
} else {
depth++;
}
}
if (strcmp(name, "..") == 0)
depth--;
return (depth < 0);
}
/**
* Return the date and time as a string
**/
char *timestring(time_t t)
{
static char TimeBuf[200];
struct tm *tm = localtime(&t);
#ifdef HAVE_STRFTIME
strftime(TimeBuf, sizeof TimeBuf - 1, "%Y/%m/%d %H:%M:%S", tm);
#else
strlcpy(TimeBuf, asctime(tm), sizeof TimeBuf);
#endif
if (TimeBuf[strlen(TimeBuf)-1] == '\n') {
TimeBuf[strlen(TimeBuf)-1] = 0;
}
return(TimeBuf);
}
/**
* Sleep for a specified number of milliseconds.
*
* Always returns TRUE. (In the future it might return FALSE if
* interrupted.)
**/
int msleep(int t)
{
int tdiff = 0;
struct timeval tval, t1, t2;
gettimeofday(&t1, NULL);
while (tdiff < t) {
tval.tv_sec = (t-tdiff)/1000;
tval.tv_usec = 1000*((t-tdiff)%1000);
errno = 0;
select(0,NULL,NULL, NULL, &tval);
gettimeofday(&t2, NULL);
tdiff = (t2.tv_sec - t1.tv_sec)*1000 +
(t2.tv_usec - t1.tv_usec)/1000;
}
return True;
}
/**
* Determine if two file modification times are equivalent (either
* exact or in the modification timestamp window established by
* --modify-window).
*
* @retval 0 if the times should be treated as the same
*
* @retval +1 if the first is later
*
* @retval -1 if the 2nd is later
**/
int cmp_modtime(time_t file1, time_t file2)
{
if (file2 > file1) {
if (file2 - file1 <= modify_window)
return 0;
return -1;
}
if (file1 - file2 <= modify_window)
return 0;
return 1;
}
#ifdef __INSURE__XX
#include <dlfcn.h>
/**
This routine is a trick to immediately catch errors when debugging
with insure. A xterm with a gdb is popped up when insure catches
a error. It is Linux specific.
**/
int _Insure_trap_error(int a1, int a2, int a3, int a4, int a5, int a6)
{
static int (*fn)();
int ret;
char *cmd;
asprintf(&cmd, "/usr/X11R6/bin/xterm -display :0 -T Panic -n Panic -e /bin/sh -c 'cat /tmp/ierrs.*.%d ; gdb /proc/%d/exe %d'",
getpid(), getpid(), getpid());
if (!fn) {
static void *h;
h = dlopen("/usr/local/parasoft/insure++lite/lib.linux2/libinsure.so", RTLD_LAZY);
fn = dlsym(h, "_Insure_trap_error");
}
ret = fn(a1, a2, a3, a4, a5, a6);
system(cmd);
free(cmd);
return ret;
}
#endif
#define MALLOC_MAX 0x40000000
void *_new_array(unsigned int size, unsigned long num)
{
if (num >= MALLOC_MAX/size)
return NULL;
return malloc(size * num);
}
void *_realloc_array(void *ptr, unsigned int size, unsigned long num)
{
if (num >= MALLOC_MAX/size)
return NULL;
/* No realloc should need this, but just in case... */
if (!ptr)
return malloc(size * num);
return realloc(ptr, size * num);
}